74,962 research outputs found
Why the xE distribution triggered by a leading particle does not measure the fragmentation function but does measure the ratio of the transverse momenta of the away-side jet to the trigger-side jet
Hard-scattering of point-like constituents (or partons) in p-p collisions was
discovered at the CERN-ISR in 1972 by measurements utilizing inclusive single
or pairs of hadrons with large transverse momentum (). It was generally
assumed, following Feynman, Field and Fox, as shown by data from the CERN-ISR
experiments, that the distribution of away side hadrons from a single
particle trigger [with ], corrected for of fragmentation would
be the same as that from a jet-trigger and follow the same fragmentation
function as observed in or DIS. PHENIX attempted to measure the
fragmentation function from the away side
distribution of charged particles triggered by a in p-p collisions at
RHIC and showed by explicit calculation that the distribution is actually
quite insensitive to the fragmentation function. Illustrations of the original
arguments and ISR results will be presented. Then the lack of sensitivity to
the fragmentation function will be explained, and an analytic formula for the
distribution given, in terms of incomplete Gamma functions, for the case
where the fragmentation function is exponential. The away-side distribution in
this formulation has the nice property that it both exhibits scaling and
is directly sensitive to the ratio of the away jet to that of
the trigger jet, , and thus can be used, for example, to measure
the relative energy loss of the two jets from a hard-scattering which escape
from the medium in A+A collisions. Comparisons of the analytical formula to
RHIC measurements will be presented, including data from STAR and PHENIX,
leading to some interesting conclusions.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, Proceedings of Poster Session, 19th International
Conference on Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions (Quark Matter
2006), November 14-20, 2006, Shanghai, P. R. Chin
Identified hadron production at high transverse momenta in p+p collisions at sqrt(NN) = 200 GeV in STAR
We report the transverse momentum (pT) distributions for identified charged
pions, protons and anti-protons using events triggered by high deposit energy
in the Barrel Electro-Magnetic Calorimeter (BEMC) from p + p collisions at psNN
= 200 GeV. The spectra are measured around mid-rapidity (|y|<0.5) over the
range of 3<pT<15 GeV/c with particle identification (PID) by the relativistic
ionization energy loss (rdE/dx) in the Time Projection Chamber (TPC) in the
Solenoidal Tracker at RHIC (STAR). The charged pion, proton and anti-proton
spectra at high pT are compared with published results from minimum bias
triggered events and the Next-Leading-Order perturbative quantum chromodynamic
(NLO pQCD) calculations (DSS, KKP and AKK 2008). In addition, we present the
particle ratios of pi-/pi+, pbar/p, p/pi+ and pbar/pi- in p + p collisions.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, Hot Quark 2008 proceedin
Polarization spectroscopy of an excited state transition.
We demonstrate polarization spectroscopy of an excited state transition in room-temperature cesium vapor. An anisotropy induced by a circularly polarized pump beam on the D2 transition is observed using a weak probe on the 6P3/2→7S1/2 transition. At high pump power, a subfeature due to Autler-Townes splitting is observed that theoretical modeling shows is enhanced by Doppler averaging. Polarization spectroscopy provides a simple modulation–free signal suitable for laser frequency stabilization to excited state transitions
Overview of event-by-event analysis of high energy nuclear collisions
The event-by-event analysis of high energy nuclear collisions aims at
revealing the richness of the underlying event structures and provide unique
measures of dynamical fluctuations associated with QGP phase transition. The
major challenge in these studies is to separate the dynamical fluctuations from
the many other sources which contribute to the measured values. We present the
fluctuations in terms of event multiplicity, mean transverse momentum, elliptic
flow, source sizes, particle ratios and net charge distributions. In addition,
we discuss the effect of long range correlations, disoriented chiral
condensates and presence of jets. A brief review of various probes used for
fluctuation studies and available experimental results are presented.Comment: Invited talk at the "XIth International Workshop on Correlation and
Fluctuation in Multiparticle Production", Nov 21-24, 2006, Hangzhou, China
(19 pages
Twenty-One New Light Curves of OGLE-TR-56b: New System Parameters and Limits on Timing Variations
Although OGLE-TR-56b was the second transiting exoplanet discovered, only one
light curve, observed in 2006, has been published besides the discovery data.
We present twenty-one light curves of nineteen different transits observed
between July 2003 and July 2009 with the Magellan Telescopes and Gemini South.
The combined analysis of the new light curves confirms a slightly inflated
planetary radius relative to model predictions, with R_p = 1.378 +/- 0.090 R_J.
However, the values found for the transit duration, semimajor axis, and
inclination values differ significantly from the previous result, likely due to
systematic errors. The new semimajor axis and inclination, a = 0.01942 +/-
0.00015 AU and i = 73.72 +/- 0.18 degrees, are smaller than previously
reported, while the total duration, T_14 = 7931 +/- 38 s, is 18 minutes longer.
The transit midtimes have errors from 23 s to several minutes, and no evidence
is seen for transit midtime or duration variations. Similarly, no change is
seen in the orbital period, implying a nominal stellar tidal decay factor of
Q_* = 10^7, with a three-sigma lower limit of 10^5.7.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, accepted to Ap
Beam-Energy and System-Size Dependence of Dynamical Net Charge Fluctuations
We present measurements of net charge fluctuations in collisions at
19.6, 62.4, 130, and 200 GeV, collisions at
62.4, 200 GeV, and collisions at 200
GeV using the net charge dynamical fluctuations measure . The
dynamical fluctuations are non-zero at all energies and exhibit a rather modest
dependence on beam energy. We find that at a given energy and collision system,
net charge dynamical fluctuations violate scaling, but display
approximate scaling. We observe strong dependence of dynamical
fluctuations on the azimuthal angular range and pseudorapidity widths.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, presented at the 19th International Conference on
Ultra-Relativistic Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, "Quark Matter 2008", Jaipur,
India, February 4-10, 200
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